GREETING CARD: Tiger asleep on a pile of cushions
£3.00
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
A single greeting card of the design Tiger asleep on a pile of cushions, taken from a watercolour painting by award-winning artist Daniel Mackie and printed on high-quality 330gsm ivory coloured card.
Cards are packed with envelopes.
The card is BLANK inside for your message.
Folded size: 7" x 5".
Wording on the back of the card - " Beauty - Why are things that are so deadly so beautiful? This is one of the questions at the heart of William Blake's famous Poem, 'The Tyger', published in 1794. 'Tiger Tyger Burning Bright in the forests of the night' is the first line. Blake explores the duality between aesthetic beauty and primal ferocity. Blake's philosophy is summarised in a question: Did he that make the lamb also make the tiger? Humanity's struggle is based on the concept of the contrary nature of things. Truth, his poetry suggests, lies in comprehending the contradictions between innocence and experience."
BRAND INFORMATION
Daniel Mackie is the artist behind this collection. This watercolour series is heavily influenced by the Japanese printmakers of the Ukiyo-e period, which flourished between 1670 and 1870. Like those great masters, Daniel seeks to create a harmonious accord between a highly stylised form and the flowing lines of nature, creating decorative designs that lift the spirit and warm the heart.
A single greeting card of the design Tiger asleep on a pile of cushions, taken from a watercolour painting by award-winning artist Daniel Mackie and printed on high-quality 330gsm ivory coloured card.
Cards are packed with envelopes.
The card is BLANK inside for your message.
Folded size: 7" x 5".
Wording on the back of the card - " Beauty - Why are things that are so deadly so beautiful? This is one of the questions at the heart of William Blake's famous Poem, 'The Tyger', published in 1794. 'Tiger Tyger Burning Bright in the forests of the night' is the first line. Blake explores the duality between aesthetic beauty and primal ferocity. Blake's philosophy is summarised in a question: Did he that make the lamb also make the tiger? Humanity's struggle is based on the concept of the contrary nature of things. Truth, his poetry suggests, lies in comprehending the contradictions between innocence and experience."
BRAND INFORMATION
Daniel Mackie is the artist behind this collection. This watercolour series is heavily influenced by the Japanese printmakers of the Ukiyo-e period, which flourished between 1670 and 1870. Like those great masters, Daniel seeks to create a harmonious accord between a highly stylised form and the flowing lines of nature, creating decorative designs that lift the spirit and warm the heart.
Quantity:
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
A single greeting card of the design Tiger asleep on a pile of cushions, taken from a watercolour painting by award-winning artist Daniel Mackie and printed on high-quality 330gsm ivory coloured card.
Cards are packed with envelopes.
The card is BLANK inside for your message.
Folded size: 7" x 5".
Wording on the back of the card - " Beauty - Why are things that are so deadly so beautiful? This is one of the questions at the heart of William Blake's famous Poem, 'The Tyger', published in 1794. 'Tiger Tyger Burning Bright in the forests of the night' is the first line. Blake explores the duality between aesthetic beauty and primal ferocity. Blake's philosophy is summarised in a question: Did he that make the lamb also make the tiger? Humanity's struggle is based on the concept of the contrary nature of things. Truth, his poetry suggests, lies in comprehending the contradictions between innocence and experience."
BRAND INFORMATION
Daniel Mackie is the artist behind this collection. This watercolour series is heavily influenced by the Japanese printmakers of the Ukiyo-e period, which flourished between 1670 and 1870. Like those great masters, Daniel seeks to create a harmonious accord between a highly stylised form and the flowing lines of nature, creating decorative designs that lift the spirit and warm the heart.
A single greeting card of the design Tiger asleep on a pile of cushions, taken from a watercolour painting by award-winning artist Daniel Mackie and printed on high-quality 330gsm ivory coloured card.
Cards are packed with envelopes.
The card is BLANK inside for your message.
Folded size: 7" x 5".
Wording on the back of the card - " Beauty - Why are things that are so deadly so beautiful? This is one of the questions at the heart of William Blake's famous Poem, 'The Tyger', published in 1794. 'Tiger Tyger Burning Bright in the forests of the night' is the first line. Blake explores the duality between aesthetic beauty and primal ferocity. Blake's philosophy is summarised in a question: Did he that make the lamb also make the tiger? Humanity's struggle is based on the concept of the contrary nature of things. Truth, his poetry suggests, lies in comprehending the contradictions between innocence and experience."
BRAND INFORMATION
Daniel Mackie is the artist behind this collection. This watercolour series is heavily influenced by the Japanese printmakers of the Ukiyo-e period, which flourished between 1670 and 1870. Like those great masters, Daniel seeks to create a harmonious accord between a highly stylised form and the flowing lines of nature, creating decorative designs that lift the spirit and warm the heart.
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
A single greeting card of the design Tiger asleep on a pile of cushions, taken from a watercolour painting by award-winning artist Daniel Mackie and printed on high-quality 330gsm ivory coloured card.
Cards are packed with envelopes.
The card is BLANK inside for your message.
Folded size: 7" x 5".
Wording on the back of the card - " Beauty - Why are things that are so deadly so beautiful? This is one of the questions at the heart of William Blake's famous Poem, 'The Tyger', published in 1794. 'Tiger Tyger Burning Bright in the forests of the night' is the first line. Blake explores the duality between aesthetic beauty and primal ferocity. Blake's philosophy is summarised in a question: Did he that make the lamb also make the tiger? Humanity's struggle is based on the concept of the contrary nature of things. Truth, his poetry suggests, lies in comprehending the contradictions between innocence and experience."
BRAND INFORMATION
Daniel Mackie is the artist behind this collection. This watercolour series is heavily influenced by the Japanese printmakers of the Ukiyo-e period, which flourished between 1670 and 1870. Like those great masters, Daniel seeks to create a harmonious accord between a highly stylised form and the flowing lines of nature, creating decorative designs that lift the spirit and warm the heart.
A single greeting card of the design Tiger asleep on a pile of cushions, taken from a watercolour painting by award-winning artist Daniel Mackie and printed on high-quality 330gsm ivory coloured card.
Cards are packed with envelopes.
The card is BLANK inside for your message.
Folded size: 7" x 5".
Wording on the back of the card - " Beauty - Why are things that are so deadly so beautiful? This is one of the questions at the heart of William Blake's famous Poem, 'The Tyger', published in 1794. 'Tiger Tyger Burning Bright in the forests of the night' is the first line. Blake explores the duality between aesthetic beauty and primal ferocity. Blake's philosophy is summarised in a question: Did he that make the lamb also make the tiger? Humanity's struggle is based on the concept of the contrary nature of things. Truth, his poetry suggests, lies in comprehending the contradictions between innocence and experience."
BRAND INFORMATION
Daniel Mackie is the artist behind this collection. This watercolour series is heavily influenced by the Japanese printmakers of the Ukiyo-e period, which flourished between 1670 and 1870. Like those great masters, Daniel seeks to create a harmonious accord between a highly stylised form and the flowing lines of nature, creating decorative designs that lift the spirit and warm the heart.